Teri and I had booked this cruise 10 months in advance and it had been
consuming our thoughts for quite some time. This would not be an
ordinary cruise for us (as if any cruise could be considered ordinary);
we would be getting married on board Sovereign of
the Seas before departure and cruising for our honeymoon!

We have been on two cruises before. The first was a five-night Premier
``Big Red Boat'' holiday cruise on the Star/Ship Atlantic with my family.
This is what got us interested in cruising. Our second cruise
was a 3-nighter on RCCL's Viking Serenade with a long-time friend.
This wedding/honeymoon cruise on Sovereign would be our
first week-long cruise and our first cruise by ourselves.

Friday, May 19, 1995

Flying to the East Coast

Our journey started in the wee hours of Friday, May 19. RCCL Passengers flying
from the West Coast to Florida are required to fly the day before and spend
the night in Miami. This suited us just fine. However, our flight left
San Diego at 7 AM so we had to get up really early.
Anyway, after a plane change in Dallas,
we arrived in Florida around 6 pm on Friday evening. As we were
flying into port we saw the Nordic Empress and several other cruise
ships in port.

A Royal Caribbean agent met us (and many other passengers) at the
gate and led us through the airport where we waited for a bus to pick us up.
Unlike other cruise lines that I have been reading about lately, we did not
have to claim our luggage. Royal Caribbean sends luggage tags with the
cruise documents that are affixed to your luggage before leaving home.
Royal Caribbean personnel grab your luggage right off the carousel and
transport it to the ship without intervention. Much more convenient than
having to pick it up and hand it over to the cruise line porters.
Unfortunately, we had to wait while several people that did not know about
the luggage tags went with an RCCL agent to find their bags,
tag them, and put them right back on the carousel.

Since we'd be staying overnight, we had to hand-carry an overnight bag.
And since we'd be getting married, I was also carrying a garment
bag with my suit and Teri was hand-carrying her wedding dress.

We rode the bus to the Hyatt Regency in Miami. Our room was very nice.
We wanted to go out on the town but decided to eat at the hotel restaurant
and get to bed early. We didn't want to be too tired on our wedding day!

Saturday, May 20, 1995

Our Wedding Day, Sovereign Departs

Saturday morning I went to the RCCL check-in desk in the lobby of
the hotel.
There was a very short line.
This is a major advantage to be able to check-in at the hotel
and then just walk onto the ship later. The one thing I don't understand
about RCCL is why they don't also activate the ship-board charge card
at check-in; this must be handled later after boarding the ship
(this was also our experience checking in at the port of Los Angeles
for our cruise on Viking Serenade).

Buses started shuttling
passengers to the ship at 11:15 am. Our wedding officiant picked
us up in a mini-van so we didn't need to hassle with the bus.
(Avoiding the bus and the crowd when arriving at the pier worked out
so nicely that in the future, we will just take a taxi
to the pier.)

The Norway was docked right next to Sovereign. It was
quite exciting on the drive up to see two
of the world's largest ships docked next to one another.

We walked into the terminal and right onto the ship. We were met
by a uniformed crewperson as we entered the ship and were shown to
our category C
cabin on deck 10, #1578. She even carried one of our bags!
Our cabin was fabulous. It was
very large with lots of closet space
and a small safe in one of the closets. There were two mini-couches
and a small table in the sitting area and three large windows. We also
had a 20" television and a refrigerator. The bathroom had a tub/shower
combination.

Our officiant had accompanied us this far,
but now he left, giving us almost an hour to change and prepare
for our wedding. When the hour was up, he returned and escorted us
down to the ship's library, where our wedding was held.
The wedding consisted of the officiant, the two of us and a photographer.

It was a nice ceremony. We had picked two poems to be read. We also
shared a glass of wine as part of the ceremony, and took two candles
and lit one.

After the ceremony the officiant left and we walked around the ship with the
photographer getting photos taken. We even ran into another couple getting
photos taken that had just been married elsewhere on the ship.
By this time, the ship was starting to
fill up with people and it got to be somewhat embarrassing walking around
all dressed up amongst the people wearing shorts and t-shirts.

The wedding company had had a bottle of sparkling wine and a cake
delivered to our cabin so we got the standard photos taken cutting the
cake and toasting, etc.

After the photographer left, we quickly changed clothes and dashed
to the Windjammer Cafe' (which we took to calling
the Foodjammer Cafe') for the buffet lunch. Then
we started exploring the ship.

As the ship was about to depart, we headed to the Viking Crown Lounge,
a spectacular room with floor-to-ceiling windows, wrapped completely
around the smokestack 14 stories above the water. We'd really
been looking
forward to spending time in the Viking Crown Lounge (we had enjoyed the
one on the Viking Serenade).

At second-seating dinner in the GiGi dining room, we met our table companions.
Our table of ten consisted of us, two other honeymoon couples, another
young couple celebrating their honeymoon (though they'd been married two
years) and one older couple. We also met our waiter, Bobby, and our
busboy, Carlos. The couple that had been married two years had
started their first honeymoon on a Dolphin cruise, but the ship
had torn a hole in its side while docking in Cozumel and their
honeymoon cruise had ended early!

Around 11 pm, we were out on deck and we saw a large ship approaching.
As it came closer we realized that it was the Majesty of the Seas
on its way back to Miami. So we got an idea of what our ship looked like
from a distance. Then it was time for the midnight buffet
in the Kismet dining room.

Sunday, May 21, 1995

At Sea and First Formal Night

We are not morning people so we ordered coffee and croissants from
room service. We liked this so much it immediately became part of our
daily routine for the rest of the cruise.

At 11:15 am, there was a get-together for honeymooners in the Viking Crown
Lounge. They had hot hors d'oveurs and served us (free) mimosas (orange
juice and champagne). We were told there were 71 honeymoon couples on
the cruise,
including two other couples that had gotten married on the ship. However,
only about 20 couples showed up to the get-together and since we had gotten
married most recently of everyone present, we got to cut the ceremonial cake
at the party. Each couple had to tell exactly when they were married,
how they met, how long they'd been together before that and who asked
who to marry them.

We had buffet lunch at the Foodjammer, and after that, we went down
to the dining room for the sit-down lunch. We came to eat!

In the late afternoon (4 pm), there was a wine ``appreciation'' hour
in the disco. For a $4 charge, we received a chrome-coated plastic
sommelier (wine steward) cup and tastes of about 8 different wines,
including one champagne. Light hors d'oveurs were served also.
It was an enjoyable way to spend an hour or so.

Monday, May 22, 1995

Labadee, Hispaniola

We looked out of our window to see a beautiful island paradise.
We had decided to snorkel at Labadee so we got all decked out in our
swim suits, hats, sunscreen, etc. When our tended number was called,
we went downstairs and were taken right to the island.

We snorkeled in the bay but the water was cloudy. Still it
was a fun experience.

Tonight was the Captain's cocktail party. It was pretty crowded
and by the time we arrived there was nowhere to sit. We never even
saw the Captain so we also didn't get our photo taken with him (no great loss).
We left and went to the Casino (but not until we had a free drink).

Tuesday, May 23, 1995

San Juan, Puerto Rico

The ship pulled into San Juan around lunch time.
We took a bus tour of San Juan. We rode around San Juan, stopping at the
Condado bridge, and again at the A Touch of Gold store
(we weren't impressed by the quality of the merchandise or the prices).
We explored San Cristobol (a fort similar to the more famous El Moro).
It was very interesting but unfortunately we didn't have enough time
to really look at everything. After the tour, most people went shopping
but the heat was so oppressive that we just went back to the air
conditioning on the ship.

Wednesday, May 24, 1995

St. Thomas/St. John

We took a ferry right from the ship to the nearby island of St. John
for a Glass-Bottom Boat Tour. We went out in a very small boat.
I felt sick from the rocking of the boat and exhaust fumes, but Teri
really enjoyed looking at the sea creatures. After that we walked around
St. John and did some shopping for the standard touristy items (t-shirts,
refrigerator magnets). Teri bought a gold necklace at Coral Bay Jewelry.
We would have liked to stay much longer on St. John, but we had to rush
to catch
the ferry back to the ship.

After returning to the ship, we went to the Havensight mall (literally
right next to the pier where the ship was docked). There is rumored to
be better shopping downtown, but we didn't have enough time to get there
and back. Many of the downtown stores have ``satellite'' stores at
Havensight anyway.

Thursday, May 25, 1995

At Sea and Second Formal Night

Teri was signed up for the slot machine tournament at the Casino.
The way it worked was each participant (in groups of eight) sat at a randomly
assigned ``tournament'' slot machine and had 10 minutes with the machine
set to ``free play'' to press ``Spin'' repeatedly and attempt to get
the highest score. The person with the highest score from each
round went to the final round and the winner of that round won
$300 or so dollars. Unfortunately, even though Teri sat at the
machine that had won the first round, it barely payed off at all in
her round. Slot machines have no conscience!

This evening was the Repeat Passenger Party. Since we'd been on an RCCL
cruise before, we were invited to attend. Free drinks (champagne)
and hot hors d'oveurs. The captain answered questions from the audience
and said that he'd shortly be transferring to the Sun Viking in the Far East.
We had a lot of champagne at that party.

Two of the couples at our table had sprung for category A cabins
(#1020 and #1510). We convinced the couple in 1020 to host
a party before dinner. Their cabin was just incredible.
The sitting area alone had enough room for all 10 of us! It contained
a full-size couch, two reclining chairs, and two other over-stuffed chairs.
There was also room to sit on the ``window sill'' next to the four large
windows. In addition,
there was a queen-sized bed with a real comforter, a huge desk/counter
space and a large bathroom. We couldn't believe our eyes.

By the time dinner rolled around we were all feeling pretty tipsy.

After dinner we all attempted to flip spoons into our water glasses.
It was very difficult and some people needed veritable runways with
8-10 glasses sitting close together.

Tonight was the gala midnight buffet. This was the most spectacular
buffet we had ever seen. There were even little edible creations made of
eggs with eyes and feet, which Allyn dubbed "Egg-Men" and lemons
cut to look like fish with large mouths, eyes and tails, which Allyn
called "Lemon-Fish".

For reasons that are no longer clear but must have made sense at the time,
we decided to
take
several of the Lemon-Fish and keep them in our cabin refrigerator and
bring them to dinner the next night.

Friday, May 26, 1995

Coco Cay (Little Stirrup Cay), Bahamas

The water at Coco Cay was unbelievably warm. We skipped snorkeling here
since we had snorkeled at Labadee (but we later heard the snorkeling
here was better). We did play in the warm water and had a very
enjoyable experience.

We brought the Lemon-Fish to dinner. I had decided (during the
afternoon's horse racing event) that I would hold
``Lemon-Fish Racing'' similar to the horse racing held earlier that afternoon.
I lined up five Lemon-Fish in a row and put down two to mark the finish line.
I ripped up some
paper into 5 slips and wrote the numbers on the papers. Each couple
chose one slip of paper to determine which Lemon-Fish was theirs.
Then I shuffled the slips and had someone choose a slip and
the Lemon-Fish corresponding to that number got to move forward one
lemon's-length. This was repeated with much cheering and hysterics
(with Bobby, Carlos and the head waiter gathered around watching)
until one lemon finally emerged victorious. The winning lemon
was photographed with its' owners.

We waited for the roving minstrels. We wanted
them to play YMCA so that we could all get up and go through the hand
motions and act silly. But they didn't know YMCA, so they played the
chicken dance
instead. Our whole table plus Bobby and Carlos were participating.
I'm sure we looked ridiculous but we had a great time.
I think people were videotaping us!

After dinner we had to rush
back to the cabin to pack. The bags had to be outside
of the cabin by midnight. We were given color-coded tags to place on
the bags so that we could find them at the pier. We made the deadline
with just a few minutes to spare!

Saturday, May 27, 1995

Fly home

Alas, our trip was coming to the end. Since room service was not available
on the last day, we went to the dining room for breakfast.
Unlike our cruise on the Viking Serenade, we were allowed to leave
our luggage in one corner of the cabin. This was much more pleasant than
having to clear out of the cabin and drag all of your hand luggage around
with you as was the case on Viking Serenade. After breakfast, we
said goodbye to our table companions and Bobby and Carlos for
the last time and returned to our cabin to relax and wait to leave.

When our color was called to depart, we gathered up our hand luggage
and took one
long last look at our cabin. It was hard to leave. It felt like home.

We easily found our luggage in our color coded area. The airlines
had checkin/baggage drop-off right at the pier. That was very convenient
(though dragging our bags to the end of the luggage area through crowds
was not).

We saw some of our table companions at the airport and sat down with
them to wait for our planes. In talking to some people near us,
they told us that the Norway had missed her Great Stirrup Cay stop
because a crew member had gotten seriously ill, and the ship
turned around and went to San Juan instead. It was not clear whether
the passengers got to go ashore in San Juan or not.

We arrived home in San Diego tired but relaxed and rested...

and already dreaming of our next cruise...

Appendix A

Our wedding was performed by A Wedding For You, one of several
companies that perform weddings aboard cruise ships. They can be reached
at 954 472 0320. They offer wedding packages aboard cruise ships departing
from Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and Los Angeles.

Allyn's 2003 update: In 1995 there were only a couple of companies
that performed cruise ship weddings and the cruise lines ignored this market
entirely. Since then the major cruise lines have started offering
onboard weddings packages themselves and it appears that
A Wedding For You's capability to peform onboard weddings has
been substantially reduced.
Princess and Royal Caribbean even
have wedding chapels aboard some of their ships now.
Check with your cruise line to see if
they perform onboard weddings.

Allyn's 2008 update: I'm sorry to say that Sovereign of the Seas has been transferred to Royal Caribbean's Spanish division, Pullmantur Cruises, and
has been renamed Sovereign.